And something to keep in mind, make sure your swap file is set on your SSD too. Otherwise it will cause a slowdown. Despite the claims that a swapfile will cause a SSD to die faster, I've never seen it happen. From personal experience, I had a 1st gen 60GB SSD that I used heavily for 8 years with a dedicated 8GB swap. When I retired it a few years ago, it still had 25% of it's life and hadn't even started using up the failure blocks.
It was a OCZ if anyone's curious. Right now it's still chugging away as the OS/Cache drive for my media server, and also hosts the temporary transcoding files. 3 years of continuous use with 2 kids and two adults and sitting at 21% life.
I've seen that happening multiple times, especially on workstations and servers that write a lot of data.
But there are two kinds of how it will happen. Some companies were simply disabling writes after some amount of data is written they were saying that it's to "protect user's data" which was nothing utter BS to cover up very blatant case of planned obsolescence. Because stored data isn't affected by writes, only free cells are. I remember there was something about class action lawsuit going on. Second case - any machine that swaps a lot (really busy server or a machine that either used for video converting/rendering images etc) can simply wear SSD flash in 2-3 years.
With those usage cases heavy swap usage can't be avoided unless we're going into high end hardware territory with 4Tb of RAM. In that case just use separate 120-256Gb SSD and replace it when it's worn out/
For gaming PC though - best option is just to add more RAM. Because while swapping on SSD is slighly faster it's better to avoid it entirely because random read/write speeds on SSDs are still up to a thousand times slower than RAM random read/writes. Only linear read/write speeds can be comparable on server grade high performance SSDs.
32Gb of RAM isn't that expensive and waay more than enough for the game. Will leave some space for other apps to run. 64Gb if you're feeling like having 50 programs running and 200+ browser tabs open. At this point the only PC that got less than that i have is 2013 laptop which i use for office stuff and as NAS to move stuff around since it got 2 2Tb drives. Even my old desktop with Phenom II X4 got 32Gb of RAM. And considering how modern Windows and Linux use RAM it also increases performance (free RAM is used for cache)